In a sign of the bitterness over the talks, the leader of one of the most powerful militant factions, the al-Qaida-linked Nusra Front, vowed to torpedo the talks and branded as a traitor anyone in the opposition who joins the gathering with the government of President Bashar Assad.
The contrasting rhetoric underscored the enormous difficulties that lie ahead even as officials meeting in Geneva confirmed attendance by both the opposition and Assad's government at the first face to face talks to try and end a savage, 3-year-old war that has killed over 1,20,000 people and uprooted millions of others.
"The US is still not convinced Iran's participation would be the right thing to do," Brahimi told a news conference after a day of meetings with Russian and US officials and Syrian neighbors who have been struggling to cope with the conflict and the more than 2.3 million Syrian refugees.
The gathering did agree on a list of about 30 nations that will attend the opening day of speeches on January 22 in the Swiss city of Montreux, including Saudi Arabia and Qatar, both key backers of the opposition, Brahimi said. Iran's participation was the only sticking point, but was still a possibility.
The actual negotiations between Assad's government and opposition representatives begin on January 24 at the UN's European headquarters in Geneva.
The talks have been put off repeatedly, in part because of fundamental disagreements over the fate of Assad but also because of disputes over who should represent the Syrian opposition and government, and whether Iran, Saudi Arabia and other regional powers should be at the table.
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